Chelsea to replace Antonio Conte with Maurizio Sarri as manager, British media reports say

Conte on holiday but is to be told he is no longer needed despite winning the FA Cup last season

Soccer Football - Chelsea - Antonio Conte FA Cup Final Press Conference - Cobham Training Centre, Cobham, Britain - May 18, 2018   Chelsea manager Antonio Conte during the press conference   Action Images via Reuters/Tony O'Brien
Powered by automated translation

Antonio Conte is to be dismissed as Chelsea manager within days and former Napoli manager Maurizio Sarri installed as his replacement according to British media reports on Thursday.

Conte is on holiday but is to be told he is no longer needed despite winning the FA Cup last season - to add to the league title he won in his first season in charge - and issuing a defiant message afterwards of how he would not change his style of management.

Sarri, a former banker, has been linked with the post even before the he stepped down from the Napoli hotseat after guiding them to runners-up spot behind Juventus for the second time in three campaigns.

Both men will cost Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich.

Conte will be due £9 million (Dh43.6m) if he does not take another job in the next year. Napoli will be due a payment for Sarri, 59, as he is still under contract with them. This is despite having been replaced by Carlo Ancelotti, who knows how swiftly Abramovich forgets past successes as he was dismissed a season after guiding them to the domestic double.

Despite no official confirmation from the club The London Evening Standard and The Sun report Sarri is already building up his backroom staff.

Giovanni Martusciello - who he worked with at Empoli - will be lured away from Inter Milan whilst former Chelsea favourite Gianfranco Zola, whose managerial career has not been a success, will also be part of the coaching staff.

Martusciello has been overseeing long term strategy and developing young talent at Inter Milan.

Napoli's Senegalese international centre-back Kalidou Koulibaly certainly believes Sarri is headed to Chelsea as he told English radio station talkSPORT after his country's opening 2-1 victory over Poland in the World Cup.

epa06299959 Napoli's head coach Maurizio Sarri (R) and his player Dries Mertens (L) attend a training session in Castel Volturno, Caserta, Italy, 31 October 2017. SSC Napoli play Manchester City on 01 November 2017 in an UEFA Champions League Group F soccer match.  EPA/CIRO FUSCO
Maurizio Sarri, right, does not work for Napoli anymore and has been replaced by Carlo Ancelotti. Ciro Fusco / EPA

"They [Chelsea] can expect nice football because he is a very good coach," Koulibaly said. "I'm disappointed that he leaves like this but we have now a big coach [Carlo Ancelotti]. We know we can win something with him.

"I hope he will win something with Chelsea because he's a nice coach."

The polish on Conte's tenure at Chelsea has become tarnished both at boardroom level and amongst his players.

He has been damaged by a fifth-placed finish -- which saw them fall short of qualifying for the Champions League -- just a year after winning the league and his constant refrain of the best players being sold and not replaced like for like did not go down well.

There have also been reports that several senior players are unhappy with his demanding training regime.

Two of their best players Belgian duo playmaker Eden Hazard and goalkeeper Thibault Courtois have also urged that Conte's future be sorted and players brought in before their rivals steal a march on them in the transfer market as they did last year.

Muddying the waters further is that both Hazard and Courtois have just two years and one year remaining on their contracts respectively and are being strongly linked with moves to Spain.

Sarri has already told the Chelsea board in their talks that top of his list to buy are Inter Milan's Uruguayan midfielder Matias Vecino and Spanish winger Jose Callejon from Napoli.